On 3 August 2015, the trilateral contact group consisting of representatives of Ukraine, Russia, and the OSCE in Minsk should produce a blueprint of the plan to demilitarize Shyrokyne. This village on the outskirts of the coastal city of Mariupol has been the epicenter of battles since March 2015, despite the previous Minsk accords. Ukraine’s volunteer battalions and Mariupol residents protest the deal, while Ukraine’s president promises that the Army will stay on the strategic heights of this village. Here are the facts about the troubling arrangement.

Shyrokyne is a strategic village 8 kilometers to the east of Mariupol, a Ukrainian-held city of 450,000 on the coast of the Azov sea.

Since August last year, the invaders have been probing Mariupol’s defenses. While a key port itself, some suspect Mariupol could be the first step for a land corridor to Crimea.

Shyrokyne has been a conflict hotspot since March despite the Minsk accord, with both sides taking casualties. According to Azov commander Andriy Biletskyi’s estimate, Ukrainian forces lost about 60 killed and 200 wounded to the enemy’s 800 total casualties.

Fighting in Shyrokyne, video by Azov battalion defending the village

80% of houses in Shyrokyne have been destroyed, all the locals have left the village

OSCE proposed demilitarization of Shyrokyne, mutual withdrawal of troops and weapons up to 23mm in caliber. OSCE monitors would establish a permanent post in Shyrokyne to monitor the ceasefire. There is no clear mechanism to prevent “DPR” troops from seizing Shyrokyne as soon as Ukrainians withdraw.

Locals in Mariupol as well as the volunteer battalion Donbas (defending Shyrokyne along with Azov) oppose the decision, calling it voluntary yielding of Ukrainian territory.

US ambassador to Ukraine has supported the DMZ (demilitarized zone) plan, being in line with Minsk agreement and serving towards establishment of peace.

Some refugees from Shyrokyne support the move, willing to return to normal life. Others believe normal life under Russian tank guns is impossible.

A DMZ supporter in Mariupol, image via 0629.com.ua

President Poroshenko stated Ukrainian troops would keep strategic heights surrounding Shyrokyne and the DMZ wouldn’t spread to Mariupol itself. The city, he assured, would remain under firm Ukrainian protection.

Ukrainian military analyst Dmytro Tymchuk believes Ukrainian troops would be unable to recapture Shyrokyne, should Russians move in upon breaking the ceasefire. He suggested a DMZ plan failure should bring a new round of sanctions against Russia.

On Tuesday, July 28, Azov and Donbas volunteer battalions (who weren’t eager to leave Shyrokyne) have been withdrawn from the village, replaced by marines.

The trilateral contact group is expected to present a more detailed DMZ plan later today after a meeting in Minsk.

Since you’re here – we have a favor to ask. Russia’s hybrid war against Ukraine is ongoing, but major news agencies have gone away. But we’re here to stay, and will keep on providing quality, independent, open-access information on Ukrainian reforms, Russia’s hybrid war, human rights violations, political prisoners, Ukrainian history, and more. We are a non-profit, don’t have any political sponsors, and never will. If you like what you see, please help keep us online with a donation!

Related

About the Source

Kirill Mikhailov has been an anti-Putin activist and citizen journalist, taking part in the widespread Russian protests of 2011-2012. After the annexation of Crimea he left Russia for Ukraine and has been a volunteer author/translator since. Follow him on @ReggaeMortis1.

Support Euromaidan Press

Article by: Volodymyr Horbulin “There will be no veterans of World War III.” Walter Mondale, former U.S. Vice-President Events in 2018 have confirmed the fears and predictions of both pragmatists and realists: Europe continues to bury...